Tom Kim produced a bogey-free final round to win at the Scottish Open on Sunday. The 24-year-old South Korean became a Rolex Series winner for the first time and picked up a victory for the first time in 1,001 days.
- At the Renaissance Club, Tom Kim's final round 64 put him two shots clear of Min Woo Lee.
- Tom Kim birdied three times on both nines, including the 16th; Min Woo Lee missed the 17th and Kim parred the 18th.
- Tom Kim finished four shots ahead of England's Matt Fitzpatrick and Scotland's Robert MacIntyre; Johnny Keefer and Keita Nakajima shared third.
- The victory was his fourth PGA Tour title, guarantees a 2027 Masters spot, and Kim praised his calm, thanking supporters on Sky Sports.
Kim was in fine form at the Renaissance Club with an impressive final round of 64 to put his name at the top of the leaderboard and two shots in front of Min Woo Lee in second. Kim also finished four shots ahead of England’s Matt Fitzpatrick and Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre, who had a share of third with Johnny Keefer and Keita Nakajima.
It was Kim’s fourth title on the PGA Tour, having won the Shriners Children’s Open in both 2022 and 2023 and the 2022 Wyndham Championship, and is now guaranteed a spot at the 2027 Masters.
Fitzpatrick and MacIntyre shared the lead coming into the final day but both finished with a one-under par 69 which was not enough for the pair of them to hold on.
Kim birdied three times on the front nine to put himself in contention and tightened his grip with another trio of birdies on the back nine, including one on the 16th which gave him a two-shot lead going into the final two holes.
Lee missed a birdie putt on the 17th which essentially handed Kim the title, and a simple par putt on the 18th ensured he was the winner.
Still, there were reasons for Lee to be satisfied. “I’m just happy with the week and obviously a win would have been nice,” he said. “But it was one of the first weeks that I was just happy with myself mentally.”
Rory McIlroy showed positive signs before the Open Championship at Royal Birkdale next week, slotting five birdies in his first seven holes to propel him up the leaderboard, in a final-day 64 that matched his lowest of the season, finishing tied for seventh with Michael Thorbjornsen.
After securing victory, Kim said on Sky Sports: “This one is up there. I played probably as good as I could have with the pressure and executed when I needed to.
“I’m very proud for being calm out there. This is awesome. There were a lot of key moments. I am trying to get better each day. I’ve had a tough couple of years and I got to taste a lot of humble pie and learn about myself. I’ve still got a long way to go but I wanted to dedicate this to the people in my corner all the time. To all those people I’d like to say thank you.”